Abstract
Community coalitions can address local issues with deep, historic, and contextual understanding that enables customized implementation of evidence-based strategies. The individuals within the coalition, their partnerships, and the social context is likely an important component of unraveling the challenges of implementation so interventions reach people in need. We focus on the relevance of baseline coalition-committee network (CCN), the networks of purposely formed subcommittees within community coalitions, structure as one of the moderating, theoretical links between community coalition social networks and intervention success. We explore the baseline composition and characteristics of five CCNs at the beginning of childhood obesity prevention interventions. Using a combination of social network, multidimensional scaling, and correspondence analyses, we examine the structure and heterogeneity of five CCNs, each consisting of a core group of stakeholders in the coalition and sometimes the broader community itself. Cross-sectional analyses are used to examine the composition of coalition-committees related to network density, centralization, hierarchy, and coalition demographics and characteristics. Results indicate that CCNs are patterned in their structure and characteristics, and we discuss whether adjustments to childhood obesity prevention interventions according to baseline structure and characteristics could be advantageous for intervention implementation. Together, these findings can inform future longitudinal investigations into CCN network structure.
Highlights
Community coalitions are a common strategy for addressing entrenched social and health issues at a local level [1,2]
We examined coalition-committee network (CCN) composition because studies suggest that multisector partnerships may impact implementation of childhood obesity prevention interventions [36,37]
The aim of this article is to compare the structure and characteristics of CCNs participating in a childhood obesity prevention intervention to (1) point to specific differences in coalition-committees and communities in which they are imbedded and (2) to underline the characteristics within coalition-committees and their broader system that may shape the implementation of childhood health interventions
Summary
Community coalitions are a common strategy for addressing entrenched social and health issues at a local level [1,2] These multi-sector collaborations are often embedded in complex systems of intervention, defined as a collection of locally tailored, structured programs or practices implemented by an array of stakeholders, that shape the way these systems form, develop, and function [3]. They have the potential to influence the trajectories of those systems. Community coalitions create a context for organizations to develop networks that go beyond the scope and time frame of coalition activity, potentially creating enduring effects on both the capacity of individual organizations and the system as a whole [5,6].
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